Christian Voice was among a group of four prominent Christian Right groups formed in 1978 and 1979.[2] Christian Voice, Moral Majority, The Religious Roundtable and the National Christian Action Coalition all enjoyed high times before being reduced to rubble by the end of Ronald Reagan's Presidency.[2]

Christian Voice is best known as the originator and developer of the Moral Report Cards[2] the "Congressional Report Card" and the "Candidates Scorecard" that were issued mainly between the years 1980 and 1984.[3] It helped organize grassroots action through use of its "Church Networking Guide".

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Christian Voice, founded by Reverends Dr. Robert Grant and Richard Zone in 1978, was formed out of several California anti-gay and anti-pornography organizations.[2] Evangelical minister Pat Robertson, who later formed the Christian Coalition, furnished some early financial resources for the organization.[2] Christian Voice made its reputation as a lobbying organization, owing mostly to Grant's decision to hire Gary Jarmin, a Washington insider and Republican politico,[2] to run Christian Voice's lobbying efforts on Capitol Hill. Jarmin, in a Francis Schaeffer and Frank Schaeffer "co-belligerent" strategy also later mimicked by Ralph E. Reed, Jr. of the Christian Coalition, urged Jews, fundamentalists, Roman Catholics, Pentecostals and charismatics, and others to put aside their differences and work together for common notions of political change.[2] This stood Christian Voice in contrast to Moral Majority, the Religious Roundtable and the National Christian Action Coalition, all of which were more narrowly fundamentalist in their ideology and were initially less willing to build political bridges to other religious communities.[2]

Christian Voice sought to counter US President Jimmy Carter's influence over the American Christian community.[2] A Democrat who embraced the born-again Christian label,[2] Carter gained high levels of popularity among Christian conservatives during his 1976 campaign.[2] After he took office, however, Carter disappointed many Christian conservatives by supporting the Panama Canal Treaty and by taking what many Christian conservatives considered to be a soft stance on Communism.[2] This perception caused Christian Voice and other Christian right organizations to rally behind Republican nominee Ronald Reagan in 1980.[2] During the 1980 US Presidential election, Christian Voice organized "Christians for Reagan" as a subdivision with the group and it also sponsored an advertising campaign that implied Carter approved of homosexual lifestyles.[2] The group gained even further notoriety when it issued "moral report cards" to grade the social voting patterns of members of Congress.[2]

The group's bare-knuckle politics angered many Christian Voice supporters, including some of the Congressmen on the board of directors.[2] Christian Voice's primary legislative objective, a constitutional amendment to allow prayer in public schools, failed near the end of Reagan's first term. After Reagan's second term began, Christian Voice shifted its activities away from lobbying and toward the publication of campaign literature, especially the aforementioned "report cards."[2] The group claimed to have distributed some 30 million report cards during the 1986 election cycle.[2] However, funding and leadership flagged after the 1986 elections,[2] which saw Republicans lose control of the US Senate,[2] and many of the key members of Christian Voice fled to form the American Freedom Coalition with funding from Unification Church leader Sun Myung Moon.[2]

As of 2012, the Christian Voice was still maintained by the American Service Council as a vehicle for direct mail campaigns both the targeting of voters and contributors and the delivery of petitions to the U.S. federal government.[4] The Americal Service Council no longer lists the Christian Voice on its own web site or maintains a separate Christian Voice" web site.[5]